Create a new, empty database in the new environment and import the exported database from the first step.

Modify your configuration file for the new site.

(Note: This guide assumes that concrete is installed at /home/your_account/public_html/ on a Linux machine. The technique is still valid wherever your site is installed.)

Make A Database Copy

There are a number of ways to get a database copy. phpMyAdmin has an "export" function, if you are unfamiliar with phpMyAdmin, youtube actually has some good tutorials.

If you have ssh access or direct terminal access to your server, this command will also give you a backup file:

mysqldump -u db_user -p db_database > database.sql

That will create a file in SQL format. You will use this file later, to re-create your site in its new home.

Get The Files

As you know, Concrete5 has plenty of files. Unsurprisingly, you want most of them on your new site. Here are the ones you can ignore:

application/files/cache/

updates/

If you cleared your cache beforehand, the cache folders should have nothing or almost nothing in them. You definitely do not want old cache on your new site.

Do not delete the updates folder while your current site is still "live". Instead, if there is anything in it, check to see if your application/config/ folder contains a file named update.php. If it does, that means your site is actually running out of a particular version in the updates folder. If update.php exists, write down the specific name contains in the array in that file.

To actually create your site archive, the easiest thing to do is to copy your entire public_html/ folder over to something like copied_site/ and then you can remove those two folders from copied site and create your archive. cPanel's File Manager lets you create an archive, and you can also do so from the command line with tar czfv site_copy.tgz copied_site/.

Now download the archive to your machine.

Move The Files

On your new hosting environment, upload, then extract your archive so that the file structure of public_html/ matches the one on your existing site. Once that's ok, you may need to modify the permissions of these folders:

application/files/

packages/

updates/

application/config/

sitemap.xml

All of these files will need to be writable by the webserver, just like doing a new install. Generally this means making them read / write / execute allowed for owner / group / world. This can be done with the command line with chmod -R a=Xrw application/files/ packages/ updates/ application/config/ sitemap.xml or with cPanel's File Manager.

Make sure the new site has the right version of the core concrete5 software. To do this, you can download the version of concrete5 listed in your config file and extract it into updates/. If your site was not running off of an update, then you can just use the version that is in your concrete/ folder.

Another option is to copy the version of concrete5 that you site is running into the public_html/concrete/ folder for your new site, and deleting the update.php file from application/config/.

New database

Now you need to create a new, empty database on the new hosting environment for your site to run. This can be done through phpMyAdmin.

Once you have the new database in place, you can now import the data either using phpMyAdmin by uploading your database dump from earlier and using phpMyAdmin's import function, or just use this command:

mysql -u db_user -p database_name < old_database.sql

Now you should have all of your files and data in place.

Update configuration

The last step is to modify your application/config/database.php for your new database credentials. This file should contain a PHP array that looks similar to this: